Landmarks

January 1st, 2009 by k8gu No comments »
MAP Refinery

MAP Refinery

Our holiday travel schedule took us past the Marathon Ashland Petroleum refinery in Canton, Ohio.  It has been a landmark on our trips to visit Mom’s family.  I wouldn’t have bothered to photograph it except Dad took one on the way up.  Since it was taken just before dusk on a cool, damp, winter day, it seems even more industrial.  The flame near the center of the image burns almost perpetually.  As a child, I always wondered why they just burned it off.  It seemed as if it were burning, somebody could at least use it to fuel something, even if it was waste.

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Christmas Cookies

December 31st, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
Grandmas Christmas Cookies

Grandma's Christmas Cookies

These are two of my favorite cookies:  thumbprints (foreground) and iced sugar cookies.  Grandma made them both this year.  I commented to Dad (or Mom, I forget who now) on the relative paucity of thumbprints on the platter.  True to form, Grandma had sent some home with earlier visitors because “something was wrong with them.”  What was wrong, I’ll never know…they tasted good to me!

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Surreal

December 15th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
RSS Feed of JGR

RSS Feed of JGR

A few months ago, I wrote up my own RSS feed generators that scraped the AGU in-press pages.  Today, one of my papers appeared in the feed.  Surreal.  And, gratifying.  In other news, my advisor discovered this week that AGU now has their own RSS feeds.  Geophysics gone Web 2.0.

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Hobby, Passion, Obsession?

December 13th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
Bus Stop

Bus Stop

When does a hobby become a passion?  When does a passion become and obsession?  I missed the bus the other day taking long-exposure shots at the bus stop (none of which came out good enough for the web—need a tripod).  I sprinted two blocks and caught the bus at a stop light.

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Brazen Squirrel

December 11th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
Brazen Squirrel

Brazen Squirrel

I just missed the bus home this afternoon. Then, I remembered that I had a book that I needed to return to the library. Before I returned it, I wanted to transcribe a quote. The easiest way, I reasoned, was to take a picture of the page and transcribe it later. So, I sat my backpack down on a concrete bench and pulled the book and my camera out.  No sooner had I opened the backpack, a squirrel hopped up on the bench and proceeded to start nosing around my stuff.  I did manage to shoo it off long enough to take this picture and get a picture of the book.  Never before have I seen a squirrel this brazen!  Perhaps he’s taking lessons from our governor?

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Electronic Music on iTunes…Finally

December 10th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
Viet - Sky EP

Viet - Sky EP

I’m not entirely thrilled about the Apple/iTunes system.  But, I have workarounds and it’s a convenient way to get music legally.  Recently, it seems that they are finally catching up with some really good electronic music, which is good news!

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HP 8405A Vector Voltmeter

December 8th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
HP 8405A

HP 8405A

A recent find.

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Linux and the Holidays

December 8th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
TO-3 ornament

TO-3 ornament

Things have been busy around here with the holidays (past and future) and trying to prepare for life after graduate school (and trying to wrap-up graduate school). There’s still lots of data to be analyzed, models to run, and even two groups of instruments to field.

Some brainstorming over the past two weeks yielded a couple of good ideas for projects. More on these as/if they come to fruition. In the mean time, I’ve been trying to get a full-size (as opposed to my OpenWRT box) Linux machine running at home again. Sarah’s old computer doesn’t have enough RAM, what RAM it has is RDRAM. So, I tried to put Xubuntu 8.04.1 LTS on my old desktop machine (the venerable sakhalin).  It’s been having a war of words with my Western Digital WD205AA hard drive.  I think it might actually be working tonight.

Yesterday’s attempt at Xubuntu 7.10 was an exercise in frustration.  Sarah was putting lights on the tree and I was generally a scrooge.  Fortunately, I saw a TO-3 transistor on my workbench and realized that I could easily make it into an ornament.  That cheered me up.  I’m sure the idea’s not new.  But, the little things make all the difference.  Christmas is coming.

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Cold, Football, and SS Phone

November 16th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
OSU at Illinois

OSU at Illinois

I picked up a cold last week.  It’s been with me since about Tuesday.  I thought I pretty well was getting it kicked.  And, then Sarah’s family came to watch the OSU-Illinois game.  I’m not a big football fan.  But, I did enjoy watching the game despite the icy wind.  Watching Beanie Wells jump an Illinois defender was definitely worth the price of admission (I was not fast enough with my camera and I don’t have a telephoto lens).  But, the cold came back—with a vengeance.  That put a damper on the 200 QSOs I hoped to contribute to the SMC total for SS Phone.  I made about 60 this morning, mostly on 40 meters, and mostly thanks to nice blistering run on 7187 kHz.  I was really weak on 20 meters.  I’ll probably make some more contacts this evening before the contest ends.

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Playing Pool: Implications for Engineering Education

November 4th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »
3 ball

3 ball

As I have written before (in the old WordPress version of the blog which I will eventually import into the present one), I have spent about the last six months learning to play pool. This has been a fascinating experience.  We have a player in our league who is almost always disruptive and socially a misfit.  But, he’s a phenomenal shooter.  He throws three sheets to the wind, takes absurdly low-probability shots, and makes them with frightening regularity.  Why?  I suspect it’s because he not only has the skill to make shots, he’s confident that it’s the right shot to take.  In the Scientific American article The Expert Mind, Philip Ross quotes chess master José Raúl Capablanca as saying, “I see only one move ahead, but it is always the correct one.”  This is also the root of the “don’t second-guess yourself” on standardized tests and the thesis of Malcolm Gladwell’s book Blink.

It would be hubris to suggest that confidence alone yields success (look no further than the White House for a counterexample).  However, the combination of experience, analysis, and confidence, act in synergy to produce results.  The challenge is to create an environment or a curriculum that prepares confident students without watering-down the process.  Confidence in engineering education is not limited to simply being confident that you can solve a given homework problem.  Confidence is understanding how you and your education fit into the engineering process.

Perhaps the most important take-home lesson for engineering educators is to subject yourself to humbling learning experiences from time-to-time.  This would make all of us better teachers.

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